19 Ind. 462 | Ind. | 1862
This was au action by Snyder against Studebaker, to recover possession of a certain tract of land. Judgment for the defendant.
The same question is presented by the pleadings and the evidence.
It appears that, in March, 1853, the plaintiff, who was . then the owner of the land, conveyed the same to the Fort Wayne and Southern Railroad Company, by deed, duly executed and delivered.
This conveyance was made on account of a stock subscription.
Afterward, in November, 1855, the railroad company, for a valuable consideration,, conveyed the premises to the' defendant.
The Fort Wayne and Southern Railroad Company was chartered by an act of the legislature, passed in 1849; and it appears that the corporators named in the act in question met in the town of Bluffton, in said county of Wells, on the
If the corporation was not created before the 1st of November, 1851, when the new constitution took effect, it could have no existence at all, as that instrument prohibits the creation of corporations, other than banking, by special act. The State v. Dawson, 16 Ind. 40. Harriman v. Southam, Id. 190.
The plaintiff claims, that inasmuch as there was no acceptance of the charter, or organization under it, until after the adoption of the constitution of 1851, there was no such corporation as The Fort Wayne and Southern Railroad Company at the time he executed the conveyance, and, hence, that no title passed from him. But is he in a condition to dispute the existence of the corporation at the time he made his conveyance to it?
It has been held, in numerous cases in this State, that a party who has contracted with a corporation, as such, is, as a general proposition, estopped by his contract to dispute the existence of the corporation at the time of the contract. The following cases may be cited, though there are, perhaps, others reported, and some not reported as yet. Judah v. The American Live Stock Insurance Company, 4 Ind. 333. The Brookville and Greensburg Turnpike Company v. McCarty, 8 Id. 392. Ensey v. The Cleveland and St. Louis Railroad Company, 10 Id. 178. Fort Wayne and Bluffton Turnpike Company v. Deam, Id. 563. Jones v. The Cincinnati Type Foundery Company, 14 Id. 89. Hubbard v. Chappell, Id. 601. The Evansville, etc. Railroad Company v. The City of Evansville, 15 Id. 395. Meikel v. The German Savings Fund Society, 16 Id. 181. Heaston v. The Cincinnati and Fort Wayne Railroad Company, Id. 275.
The doctrine is by no means confined to the State, but prevails elsewhere. The Dutchess Cotton Manufactory v.
The estoppel arises upon matter of fact only, and not upon matter of law. Hence, if there be no law which authorized the supposed corporation, or if the statute authorizing it be unconstitutional and void, the contract does not estop the party making it, to dispute the existence of the corporation. But if, on the other hand, there be a law which authorized the corporation, then, whether the corporators have complied with it, so as to become duly incorporated, is a question of fact, and the party making the contract is estopped to dispute the organization or the legal existence of the corporation. This proposition is substantially stated, in the cases of Jones v. The Cincinnati Type Foundery Company; Meikel v. The German Savings Fund Society; and Heaston v. The Cincinnati and Fort Wayne Railroad Company, supra.
Let us apply the doctrine to the case before us. The corporators named in the act to establish the Fort Wayne and Southern Railroad Company had a right, at any time before the offer of the franchises was withdrawn, that is, before the constitution of 1851 was adopted, to accept the charter, and organize under it. If they did so accept the charter, and organize, the corporation was legitimately created, and the new constitution did not destroy it.
Whether they did so accept the charter, and organize, was a question of fact, and the plaintiff, by his conveyance, is estopped to deny such acceptance and organization.
That the corporators accepted the charter, and organized' under it, within the time when it was competent to do so,
The conclusion necessarily follows, that the plaintiff is estopped to dispute the existence of the corporation at the time of his conveyance to it.
This point was ruled the other way in the case of Harriman v. Southam, 16 Ind. 190, but, upon more mature reflection, we are satisfied that the decision upon this point was wrong, and should be overruled.
“We may remark, also, that the doctrine of estoppel was erroniously applied in the case of The Evansville, etc. Railroad Co. v. The City of Evansville, 15 Ind. 395. There the point made was, that the law, under which the corporation was organized, was unconstitutional and void. A party, we have seen, does not, by his contract, estop himself to deny that there is any law, or any valid law, by which the corporation was authorized.
’ Some further observation, in respect to the case before us, will not be out of place. The doctrine of estoppel, as applied to the case, does not rest upon a mere technical rule of law. It has its foundation in the clearest equity, and the principles of natural justice. The doctrine of estoppel, in pais, is of comparatively recent growth, but is firmly and clearly established. “The recent decisions of the courts, both in this country and in England, appear to have given a much broader sweep to the doctrine of estoppel in pais, than that which formerly existed, and to have established that, in all cases where an act is done, or a statement made, by a party, the truth or efficacy of which it would be a fraud, on his part, to controvert or impair, there the character of an estoppel will be given to what would otherwise be mere matter of evidence, and it will, therefore, become binding upon a jury, even in the presence of proof of a contrary nature.” 2 Smith, Lead. Ca. p. 531, 1 Am. Ed. See, also, upon this subject, Kinney v. Farnsworth, 17 Conn. 355.
In our opinion, the judgment below is right, and must be affirmed.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.